27 Amendments*
On paper, the United States has 27 amendments. Politicians treat that number like proof the system works. The actual record tells a different story.
I
What an Amendment Is Supposed to Do
A constitutional amendment is meant to resolve an issue in the structural system. Amendments should:
Correct structural mistakes in the original design.
Expand or secure fundamental rights.
Update the machinery — elections, succession, procedures — when real-world experience exposes flaws.
II
The Founding Mother
The Articles of Confederation were weak. They left the country with no functional central government, no ability to collect taxes, and no real authority to hold the states together. The men who built the Constitution in 1787 did it behind closed doors to replace those Articles, and the document they produced gave no explicit rights to individuals at all.
Federalists supported the new Constitution as written. Anti-Federalists argued it gave the central government too much power without guaranteeing individual rights. Madison's position was that listing specific rights was actually dangerous. It would imply that any right not listed didn't exist. He feared a bill of rights would become a ceiling instead of a floor.
The Anti-Federalists refused to ratify without guaranteed protections. But the demand didn't originate entirely with them. Mercy Otis Warren, a political writer and one of the sharpest constitutional critics of the era. She published Observations on the New Constitution in 1788 under the pen name "A Columbian Patriot." Her arguments laid the intellectual groundwork for demanding a bill of rights and influenced the ratification debates in multiple states.
That's right, America. The Founding Fathers had a mother. Without her, we may never have gotten the rights we hold so dear today.
Both sides turned out to be right. The government does exploit rights not explicitly listed. And the rights that were included have provided more protection than the Founders themselves anticipated.
The Bill of Rights was not really amendments. When Madison sent his proposed articles to the states in 1789, there were twelve. Two failed ratification. The ten that passed became the Bill of Rights.
They were drafted as articles, not amendments, because Madison wanted them woven directly into the original Constitution. They stayed separate, and the Constitution was ratified on his promise to pass them.
236 Years. 27 Numbers. Three Real Corrections.
The first ten are grouped as the Bill of Rights that were conditions of ratification. The 16 that follow span nearly two centuries. Click any amendment to expand it. Filter by type to see the pattern.
All
Bill of Rights
Structural Correction
Procedural Upgrade
Patch / One-Off Fix
Guarantees core expressive and religious freedoms. No religion can hold authority over U.S. law.
Right to keep and bear arms, within whatever regulations courts allow.
No quartering soldiers in private homes in peacetime without consent.
Protection against unreasonable searches and seizures. Warrants require probable cause.
Due process in federal law, protection against self-incrimination, double jeopardy, and uncompensated government takings.
Speedy, public criminal trials with an impartial jury, right to counsel, and the right to confront witnesses.
Right to a jury trial in certain civil cases.
Prohibits excessive bail, excessive fines, and cruel and unusual punishment.
The enumeration of rights in the Constitution does not deny or disparage other rights retained by the people. Madison's direct answer to his own concern.
Powers not delegated to the federal government, nor prohibited to the states, are reserved to the states or to the people.
Prohibits federal courts from hearing suits brought against a state by citizens of another state or country. A direct response to Chisholm v. Georgia.
Requires separate Electoral College votes for president and vice president, after the 1800 election ended in a tie between Jefferson and his own running mate.
Abolishes slavery and involuntary servitude nationwide, except as punishment for crime. Required a civil war to pass.
Guarantees birthright citizenship, due process, and equal protection under the law. Aimed at securing rights for formerly enslaved people — and subsequently became the most litigated amendment in U.S. history.
Prohibits denying the vote on the basis of race. Undermined for nearly a century by Jim Crow laws until the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Authorizes Congress to levy a federal income tax without apportioning it among the states.
Shifts the election of U.S. senators from state legislatures to direct popular vote. Previously, senators were chosen by state legislatures — a system riddled with corruption and deadlock.
Bans the manufacture, sale, and transport of alcoholic beverages. Later repealed. The only amendment ever undone by another.
Prohibits denying the vote on the basis of sex, effectively enfranchising women nationwide. Required decades of activism, arrests, and hunger strikes.
Moves presidential and congressional inauguration dates to shorten the "lame duck" period between election and swearing-in.
Repeals the 18th Amendment. The only amendment in U.S. history that explicitly cancels another.
Limits presidents to two elected terms. Passed after FDR won four consecutive elections. A reaction to a single man, written into permanent law.
Grants Washington, D.C. electoral votes in presidential elections. D.C. still has no voting representation in Congress.
Bans poll taxes in federal elections, dismantling one of the key tools used to suppress Black voters in the South.
Clarifies the line of presidential succession and establishes procedures if the president becomes disabled or incapacitated. Passed in the aftermath of the Kennedy assassination.
Lowers the voting age from 21 to 18. Ratified in roughly 100 days, driven by the argument that men being drafted to fight in Vietnam were old enough to vote. One of the fastest ratifications in history.
Delays any congressional pay raise until after the next House election. Originally proposed by Madison in 1789, it sat unratified for 203 years until a University of Texas undergraduate rediscovered it and led a state-by-state ratification campaign.
The record shows a country that only truly fixes its deepest wrongs after catastrophic conflict or multi-generation activism — not through routine, healthy maintenance.
Politicians point to 27 amendments as evidence the system works. The actual count of deep structural corrections is three. In 236 years.
Instead of waiting for another war or another century-long movement, Citizens Before Politics is trying to push through real correction without violence, retaliation, or manipulation. It's been 230 years since citizens had a direct hand in shaping the structure of their government. That's long enough.